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MUSIC Galaxy Francis leans into community to reinvent himself

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MUSIC

MUSIC

By ALEJANDRO HERNANDEZ

City of Win is a series curated by Isiah “ThoughtPoet” Veney and written by Alejandro Hernandez that uses prose and photography to create portraits of Chicago musicians and cultural innovators working to create positive change in their communities.

Our current understanding of how galaxies form is that they’re shaped by the clumping together of dark matter, which makes up the invisible scaffolding of the universe. Clouds of gas and dust gather along this sca olding, slowly collapsing into stars that evolve and then die in supernova explosions. These explosions create clouds of gas that form new stars and the planetary systems around them. This cycle of death and rebirth has continued for billions of years, and galaxies have continued to develop during all that time—as they accrete mass or merge with other galaxies, they slowly grow larger and more organized in their structure.

Lamont Anderson knows a thing or two about evolution. The Chicago-based artist formerly known as L.A. VanGogh has spent more than a year rebranding himself creatively as Galaxy Francis. Under his previous name, he’d built a solid reputation thanks to a diverse skill set: rapping, singing, producing, and engineering. But he felt he’d outgrown that persona, and the name “L.A. VanGogh” was creating logistical problems.

“Search-wise, it’s a fucking mess,” he says. “I’m competing with Vincent van Gogh, La Oreja de Van Gogh, the Van Gogh exhibit—so much has to populate before you might see me.” He thought carefully about what he wanted his new identity to be.

“You break down [‘Galaxy Francis’], ‘galaxy’ by definition is a collection of gas and stars and dust that comprise worlds, and I feel like that myself, making space for all that I am as a singer, rapper, and even a producer,” he ex- plains. “‘Francis’ translates to ‘free man.’ So allowing all those worlds inside of me to be free.”

This May, Galaxy reintroduced himself to audiences with the first project under his new name. Throughout the 13-minute EP iNNERGALACTiC: SiDE A , he takes listeners on a rocket ride around his musical universe, switching flows across a range of multidimensional beats and bouncing between spitting clever bars and harmonizing choruses. By including standout features from the likes of Icy LS, Jay Wood, and Manasseh, Galaxy stays true to his name—he’s creating space for other stars to shine.

Galaxy hasn’t always had access to a team of collaborators, though. When he was first introduced to music making, he had to learn to do everything himself—vocals, production, engineering—simply because he had no other choice.

“The first rap song I ever remember hearing was ‘Gin & Juice’ by Snoop Dogg and Dr. Dre, and if you know Dr. Dre, you know he produces and engineers his own stuff,” he recalls. “So I think that idea of being self-sufficient was like subconsciously pumped into me. And just coming from where I come from, resources didn’t always allow me to hire all of these team members.”

Galaxy’s list of music influences—Motown, west-coast hip-hop, modern EDM—spans decades and genre lines, and he credits battle rap for helping sharpen his writing.

“Again, a lot of worlds that make up that galaxy. You got R&B, you got alternative. I really recently got into electronic music. Just those types of production elements make a lot of things really fun.”

In April 2022, Galaxy was still working at a T-Mobile store and transitioning between personas. He took a trip to Los Angeles with friends whose connections there included

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